Weaving memory into textiles
For the MIT Visiting Artist Chloé Bensahel, fabric itself tells the story.
For the MIT Visiting Artist Chloé Bensahel, fabric itself tells the story.
The grants fund studies of clean hydrogen production, fetal health-sensing fabric, basalt architecture, and shark-based ocean monitoring.
The Institute also ranks second in five subject areas.
PhD student Lavender Tessmer applies computation to create textiles that behave in novel ways.
In order to recycle construction materials, keep them close to home, a new study of Amsterdam suggests.
In class 4.500 (Design Computation), Professor Larry Sass teaches the thoughtful and experimental process of design through the familiar idea of a chair, while exploring “foundational technologies.”
Extractive industries threaten water, glaciers, and livelihoods, but new research offers hope.
A collaboration between ACT and MIT.nano, the class 4.373/4.374 (Creating Art, Thinking Science) asks what it really takes to cultivate dialogue between disciplines.
Developed by the Self-Assembly Lab, the 4D Knit Dress uses several technologies to create a custom design and a custom fit, while addressing sustainability concerns.
Materials from MIT’s Distinctive Collections reveal stories of women at the Institute.
The associate producer shares how arts initiatives bring different departments together in collaboration and community.
Gifted by Professor Lily Tsai, former chair of the faculty, and designed by Professor Brandon Clifford, the staff is a new, integral part of MIT Commencement.
Their new technique can produce furniture-sized aluminum parts in only minutes.
Atacama Biomaterials, co-founded by Paloma Gonzalez-Rojas SM ’15, PhD ’21, combines architecture, machine learning, and chemical engineering to create eco-friendly materials.
Professor of the practice and innovative scholar of urban design and dynamics will oversee leading global showcase for architectural work.